Sunday 10 June 2012

Times Arrow - Martin Amis

I'd be tempted to say that this book has overtones of 'The Curious Case of Benjamin Button', but that would be unfair as I've not read Benjamin Button, only seen the film. But the device of time moving backwards is used to great affect in both. Times Arrow is narrated by sort of conciousness within the mind of a doctor (when we first meet him), who views the life described backwards - from being a doctor in America, to working in the death camps of Nazi Germany. Although a short book it took longer than usual to read as many of the sections needed re-reading in order to get my head around them, especially the dialogue (which often needed to be read backwards to make sense). The author has clearly thought through many things backwards, descriptions of some bodily functions are not nice to think about! However, the way the narrator sees and understands day to day life is fascinating, the giving of gifts, or administering of medical treatments - think about a person coming to a doctor feeling pleased and well, only to go through an opertation which makes them worse! Although it took a while to get into, and I didn't much care for the character, the unusual method of telling the story kept me gripped. No idea where I got the book, read on John's recommendation. May 2012

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